2017 World's Strongest Man

The 2017 World's Strongest Man was the 40th edition of the World's Strongest Man competition. It was held in Gaborone, Botswana from May 20 to 28.[2] The tournament was won by Eddie Hall of the United Kingdom, with Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson of Iceland second and defending champion Brian Shaw of the United States third. Hall announced after the competition that he would not defend his title.[3] Four-time champion Zydrunas Savickas of Lithuania finished in ninth place; this marked the first time in his career that he failed to finish in the top three after qualifying for the final.

2017 World's Strongest Man
Competition information
Dates20-28 May 2017
VenueThree Dikgosi Monument /
Sir Seretse Khama International Airport
LocationGaborone
Country Botswana
Athletes participating30
Nations participating16
Champion(s)
United Kingdom Eddie Hall[1]

Participants edit

Heat Results edit

A change was made to the qualifying rounds for 2017. Each group participated in five normal events, with the highest scoring competitor at the end of those events being declared the group winner and automatically qualifying for the final.[4] The lowest scoring competitor was eliminated from further competition.

In a throwback to early competitions, where a head-to-head competition determined the overall champion, the four remaining competitors faced off in an event called Last Man Standing. The event consisted of a hurdle placed in the middle of an octagon with a white square in the middle, in which was placed an Atlas Stone.

The event was conducted in a stepladder format, with the fifth place and fourth place competitors beginning the event. Each competitor took turns lifting the stone from their side of the square and dropping it over the hurdle. The lift had to be started from within the square and each competitor was given ten seconds to lift and drop the stone. Once one of them could not complete the task, he was eliminated from the event and the third place competitor stepped in. The survivor of that matchup took on the second place competitor, with the winner of the event joining the overall group winner in the final.

Heat 1 edit

# Name Nationality Pts
1 Brian Shaw   United States 27
2 Jean-François Caron   Canada 24
3 Matjaz Belsak   Slovenia 21
4 Colm Woulfe   New Zealand 16.5
5 Tom Stoltman   United Kingdom 6
6 Mark Felix   United Kingdom 3.5

Heat 2 edit

# Name Nationality Pts
1 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 33
2 Martins Licis   United States 21
3 Luke Stoltman   United Kingdom 20
4 Stefán Sölvi Pétursson   Iceland 14
5 Jimmy Paquet   Canada 13
6 Dimitar Savatinov   Bulgaria 4

Heat 3 edit

# Name Nationality Pts
1 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 24.5
2 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 19
3 Mikhail Shivlyakov   Russia 18
4 Johan Els   South Africa 15
5 Rob Kearney   United States 15
6 Mikkel Leicht   Denmark 13.5

Heat 4 edit

# Name Nationality Pts
1 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 24.5
2 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 22.5
3 Ari Gunnarsson   Iceland 22.5
4 Derek DeVaughn   United States 13.5
5 Lauri Nämi   Estonia 10.5
6 Gerhard Van Staden   South Africa 7.5

Heat 5 edit

# Name Nationality Pts
1 Nick Best   United States 22
2 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 22
3 Peiman Maheripour   Iran 18.5
4 Terry Hollands   United Kingdom 17
5 Bryan Benzel   United States 13.5
6 Olu Fadesire   Nigeria 5

Finals Events Results edit

Event 1: Tyre Flip edit

  • 500 kilograms (1,100 lb) tyre for 6 flips
  • Time Limit: 60 seconds
# Name Nationality Time (sec) Event Pts Overall Pts
1 Brian Shaw   United States 27.28 10 10
2 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 28.83 9 9
3 JF Caron   Canada 31.56 8 8
4 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 34.52 7 7
5 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 35.12 6 6
6 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 39.87 5 5
7 Martins Licis   United States 39.93 4 4
8 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia DNF (5 Flips) 3 3
9 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania DNF (3 Flips) 1.5 1.5
9 Nick Best   United States DNF (3 Flips) 1.5 1.5

Event 2: Squat Lift edit

  • Weight: 317.5 kilograms (700 lb) for repetitions[5]
  • Time Limit: 60 seconds
# Name Nationality Repetitions Event Pts Overall Pts
1 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 15 10 16
2 Brian Shaw   United States 13 7.5 17.5
2 JF Caron   Canada 13 7.5 15.5
2 Martins Licis   United States 13 7.5 11.5
2 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 13 7.5 9
6 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 12 4.5 13.5
6 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 12 4.5 9.5
8 Nick Best   United States 6 3 4.5
9 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 3 2 9
10 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 2 1 4

Event 3: Viking Press edit

  • Weight: 160 kilograms (350 lb) for repetitions
  • Time Limit: 60 seconds
# Name Nationality Repetitions Event Pts Overall Pts
1 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 15 10 26
2 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 14 9 22.5
3 Brian Shaw   United States 12 8 25.5
4 JF Caron   Canada 8 6 21.5
4 Martins Licis   United States 8 6 17.5
4 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 8 6 10
7 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 7 3.5 13
7 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 7 3.5 12.5
9 Nick Best   United States 3 2 6.5
10 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 2 1 10

Event 4: Plane Pull edit

  • Weight: 26,000 kilograms (57,000 lb)
  • Course Length: 40 metres (130 ft)
  • Time Limit: 60 seconds
# Name Nationality Time (sec) Event Pts Overall Pts
1 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 40.07 10 22.5
2 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 41.10 9 31.5
3 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 42.92 8 34
4 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 44.14 7 20
5 Brian Shaw   United States 47.60 6 31.5
6 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 47.73 5 15
7 Martins Licis   United States 49.30 4 21.5
8 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 50.25 3 13
9 JF Caron   Canada DNF 29.81 metres (97.8 ft) 2 23.5
10 Nick Best   United States DNF 21.38 metres (70.1 ft) 1 7.5

Event 5: Max Deadlift edit

  • Opening Weight: 380 kilograms (840 lb)
# Name Nationality Weight Lifted Event Pts Overall Pts
1 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 472.5 kilograms (1,042 lb) 10 44
2 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 460 kilograms (1,010 lb) 8.5 40
2 Brian Shaw   United States 460 kilograms (1,010 lb) 8.5 40
4 JF Caron   Canada 440 kilograms (970 lb) 6 29.5
4 Martins Licis   United States 440 kilograms (970 lb) 6 27.5
4 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 440 kilograms (970 lb) 6 19
7 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 400 kilograms (880 lb) 3.5 23.5
7 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 400 kilograms (880 lb) 3.5 18.5
9 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 380 kilograms (840 lb) 1.5 24
9 Nick Best   United States 380 kilograms (840 lb) 1.5 9

Event 6: Atlas Stones edit

  • 5 Atlas Stone series ranging from 150–210 kilograms (330–460 lb)
  • Time Limit: 60 seconds
# Name Nationality Time (sec) Event Pts Overall Pts
1 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 5 in 28.99 10 50
2 Martins Licis   United States 5 in 33.24 9 36.5
3 Brian Shaw   United States 5 in 40.48 8 48
4 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 5 in 58.74 7 51
5 JF Caron   Canada 4 in 29.41 6 35.5
6 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 4 in 33.01 5 29
7 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 4 in 35.36 4 23
8 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 3 in 19.76 3 21.5
9 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 3 in 45.66 2 25.5
10 Nick Best   United States 2 in 6.68 1 10

Final standings edit

# Name Nationality Pts
1 Eddie Hall   United Kingdom 51
2 Hafþór Júlíus Björnsson   Iceland 50
3 Brian Shaw   United States 48
4 Martins Licis   United States 36.5
5 Jean-François Caron   Canada 35.5
6 Mateusz Kieliszkowski   Poland 29
7 Laurence Shahlaei   United Kingdom 25.5
8 Konstantine Janashia   Georgia 23
9 Zydrunas Savickas   Lithuania 21.5
10 Nick Best   United States 10


References edit

  1. ^ "Eddie 'The Beast' Hall crowned World's Strongest Man". BBC. 29 May 2017. Retrieved 3 June 2017.
  2. ^ "World's Strongest Man 2017 Announcement". World's Strongest Man. 4 April 2017. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  3. ^ Sentinel, Stoke; Gadd, Mick (28 May 2017). "Eddie Hall retires from World's Strongest Man competition after Brit claims historic victory". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  4. ^ "WSM 2017 Groups and Events Released". World's Strongest Man. 4 May 2017. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  5. ^ "2017 World's Strongest Man Final". YouTube. Retrieved 25 March 2022.

External links edit

Preceded by 2017 World's Strongest Man Succeeded by